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. 2024 Jun 10;6(9):101131. doi: 10.1016/j.jhepr.2024.101131

Table 1.

Multiparametric diagnosis guide for acute liver failure.

Aetiologic trigger Clinical phenotype Testing Liver histology
HAV, HBV, HCV, HEV Epidemiological background
Viral prodromes (malaise, fever, diarrhoea)
Hyperacute course
High AST, ALT, and INR
Anti-HAV IgM
Anti-HB core IgM, HBV surface antigen, and HBV-DNA
Anti-HCV Ig and HCV-RNA
Anti-HEV IgM and HEV-RNA
Massive or submassive hepatocellular necrosis
Lymphocytic infiltrates
Varying degrees of fibrosis in HBV reactivation
Immunohistochemical staining
HSV, VZV, CMV, EBV, ADV, PB1924 Immunocompromised (but also in immunocompetent)
Hyperacute course
High fever with or without skin/mucosal lesions in HSV and VZV
Disseminated infection
Multiorgan failure
IgM and blood viral load Massive or submassive hepatocellular necrosis
Viral inclusions
Immunohistochemical staining
Paracetamol overdose Intentional (younger) or accidental overdose
Hyperacute course
Metabolic acidosis and acute kidney injury
Drug serum concentration Coagulative confluent hepatocellular necrosis in centrilobular areas
DILI Epidemiological background
Acute or subacute clinical course
Varying patterns of liver injury
Exclude other causes of ALF Necroinflammatory pattern
Massive or submassive hepatocellular necrosis
Lymphocytic infiltrates
Autoimmune hepatitis25 Young women
History of other autoimmune disorders
High transaminases and high bilirubin
May follow a subacute course (ascites)
High gamma globulin levels
Autoantibodies (not in 50% of cases)
Centrilobular and confluent necrosis
Lymphoplasmacytic infiltration
Interface hepatitis
Varying degrees of fibrosis
Wilson’s disease Young patients
Neurologic or psychiatric background
Acute intravascular non-immune haemolysis
High bilirubin and low alkaline phosphatase
Modest elevations of transaminases with high AST/ALT ratio
Progression to AKI
High 24h-cupruria
High relative exchangeable copper
Low serum copper and low ceruloplasmin
Microvesicular steatosis
Glycogenated nuclei
Varying degrees of fibrosis
Hypoxic hepatitis History of congestive heart failure or refractory shock
Very sudden and high increase in transaminases and INR with abrupt recovery
Transient elevation of bilirubin after recovery
Other signs of end-organ damage
Perform liver imaging to assess vascular permeability Predominant centrilobular necrosis
Heatstroke Hyperthermia > 40 °C
History of physical exhaustion (exercise, heat wave)
Concomitant recreational use of cocaine or MDMA
Very high transaminases and INR
Other signs of end-organ damage (AKI, rhabdomyolysis, ARDS)
Exclude other causes of ALF Predominant centrilobular necrosis
Mushroom poisoning Epidemiologic background
Severe gastroenteritis
High transaminases
Amatoxins in urine Massive hepatocellular coagulative necrosis
Malignant infiltration Lymphoma, leukaemia, breast cancer, colon cancer
Toxic syndrome, B symptoms
High bilirubin and cholestasis
Hepatomegaly and lymphadenopathies
Liver biopsy Atypical cell infiltration in sinusoids
HELLP syndrome26 Third trimester of pregnancy (frequent history of preeclampsia/eclampsia)
Coombs negative haemolysis
High transaminases and low platelets
May progress to liver rupture
Exclude other causes of ALF Microvascular fibrin deposition, neutrophilic infiltrate, fatty infiltration, lobular necrosis, and periportal haemorrhage
Acute fatty liver of pregnancy26 Third trimester of pregnancy (infrequent history of preeclampsia/eclampsia)
Abdominal pain and vomiting
Ascites
Severe coagulopathy and encephalopathy
Low transaminases
Progression to AKI
Swansea criteria Microvesicular steatosis
Acute Budd-Chiari syndrome25 Myeloproliferative neoplasm or other prothrombotic disease
Abdominal pain
Painful hepatomegaly and ascites
Hepatic vein congestion on ultrasound
Vein thrombosis identification on imaging
Centrilobular vein dilation

ADV, adenovirus; AKI, acute kidney injury; ALF, acute liver failure; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; CMV, cytomegalovirus; DILI, drug-induced liver injury; EBV, Epstein-Barr virus; HSV, herpes simplex virus; PB19, parvovirus B19; VZV, herpes zoster virus.